Poland’s coal mining sector has reduced its losses since last year but still needs billions of złoty in state support to survive, according to Polish media.
In the first half of 2025, the sector made a net loss of 4.059 billion złoty (€950 million), Industrial Development Agency data show, less than half of the 8.365 billion złoty (€1.97 billion) lost in the first six months of 2024. Over the whole of 2023, Polish coal mining turned a net profit of 4.8 billion złoty (€1.13 billion).
Despite the improved performance, the industry needs shoring up from the state budget due to rising costs and falling output, one trade union leader told the wnp.pl business news site. Bogusław Ziętek, head of the Sierpień 80 miners’ union, said the high costs are a result of government policy.
As part of its ‘green transition’ policy of diversifying energy production away from fossil fuels and toward renewables, the government has capped coal extraction. This year’s output is equal to that forecast for 2035, and this falling yield has pushed up the production price per ton, Ziętek said. Because of this, he argues, the government’s energy policy will cost the state billions.
Polish online energy portal Wysokie Napięcie reports that the government has earmarked over 9 billion złoty (€2.12 billion) to support collieries in 2025, made up of 3.5 billion złoty (€820 million) in direct subsidies and up to a further 5.4 billion złoty (€1.27 billion) in loans.
A ‘social agreement’ between the government and miners’ unions officially allocates around 29 billion złoty (€6.82 billion) for subsidies to unprofitable mining firms until 2031, though some sources have suggested the true cost may be as high as 42 billion złoty (€9.88 billion).